Burn Unit: saving lives after the flames,
2004 book by
Barbara Ravage. Explanation for layman of burn injuries
and modern medical treatment. I got it from the library and
found it helpful enough to then search out a copy for my Iroquois
library. You'll find copies on Amazon.

Unsolicited
testimony: If you need a host
for your website or photos, consider
Icestorm. I have
worked with the company for over a decade and remain impressed
with their customer service and response times. Their tech support people actually read
and respond to tickets.

For research I use a
variety of online subscription services, including Ancestry.com,
Fold3 and Newspapers.com. Coreldraw is used to make
scrapbook-like buckets to store graphic and data components. For Html code generation I use
an old copy of 2003 MS Frontpage and to keep track of things
use MS Access databases and Excel. I've been using a personal
computer since 1984 but am entirely self taught and older than
mud: if I can do
it, you can too, just dive in and have fun.

Tracking changes

This is an on-going
project and changes are made almost every day. If you are
researching a relative and would like to know if information has
been added, there are programs to help you do that. I have
not tried any of those mentioned in
Karen
Blakeman's list of programs to notify you of website content
changes so cannot offer tips or evaluations. Some can
be set up to send you an email if the content changes on any
single page of a website. So if you want to know if
information has changed about the
Reidy family, for example, you'll be notified. (Be
advised that receiving a notification every time a change is
made on each and every 530+ pages on the website is apt to
become annoying.)

* Fridge magnet sales help
pay for subscriptions to genealogy and newspaper sites.

﻿

Edward M. Teall insurance
meddler

Austrian family sorrow
and betrayal

One of his many wives
died at the Iroquois

Austrian family sorrow
and betrayal

Albert C. Barnes
assistant states attorney

Ben Hur to replace Mr
Bluebeard at Iroquois Theater

Davis experience with
fire began on USS Blackhawk

Iroquois Theater managers
post $10,000 bonds

41 Chicago public school
teachers Iroquois Theater victims

Antonio Frosolono
violinist and music director Iroquois Theater

Cigar store kept Iroquois Theater receipts

6 Evanston Illinois
teenage girls escaped from Iroquois Theater

Coroners jury for
Iroquois Theater disaster

Jack Haverly was one of
Will J. Davis' early theater employers

Robert Crowe
co-prosecutor in Iroquois Theater trial

Iroquois managers son at
fire

Aunt
Falkenstein and Niece Rothe Iroquois victims

All 3 Harbaugh sisters
were Iroquois
Theater victims

James Strong lost his
family at the Iroquois Theater

Lost bodies and surviving
husbands

Daisy Livingstone and
Regensburg cousins perished

Famous Pulitzer newspaper
cartoonist Iroquois feature

﻿

If you have additional
info about an Iroquois victim, or find an error, I would like to
hear from you. Chaos and communication limitations of 1903
produced many errors I'm striving to correct and welcome all the help I can get. Space is provided at the
bottom of stories for comments, or contact
me directly.